Definitions

from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.

  • noun Plural form of newsbreak.

Etymologies

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Examples

  • But this was a live event: further newsbreaks are all going to be leaks from the police.

    Wood War: Who Wins Today's Grabby Tabloid Battle For Your Eyeballs? 2009

  • But this was a live event: further newsbreaks are all going to be leaks from the police.

    Wood War: Who Wins Today's Grabby Tabloid Battle For Your Eyeballs? 2009

  • All morning the radio newsbreaks led with Obama, but since noon, they have all led with McCain/Palin.

    falcon hears the falconer 2008

  • You may have already noticed the increase in our local newsbreaks throughout the day.

    Archive 2005-12-01 Jeff 2005

  • You may have already noticed the increase in our local newsbreaks throughout the day.

    Protesting the changes at WDET. Jeff 2005

  • He says, "By his own account, Brock has lied so often that a reader can't take faith on some of the juicier newsbreaks from the impeachment era in his book."

    CNN Transcript Mar 14, 2002 2002

  • At home the telephone rings incessantly for Rita, often bearing newsbreaks of soon-to-be-announced party invitations.

    A Mind at a Time M.D. Mel Levine 2002

  • At home the telephone rings incessantly for Rita, often bearing newsbreaks of soon-to-be-announced party invitations.

    A Mind at a Time M.D. Mel Levine 2002

  • It is also, as a humorous magazine specializing in comic newsbreaks, morbidly afraid of printing anything that could possibly seem unintentionally funny.

    Edmund Wilson On Writers and Writing Wilson, Edmund 1977

  • There won't be a show weatherman because weather will be covered in the local newsbreaks supplied by affiliates.

    NYDN Rss Richard Huff 2011

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